A jukebox whirs in the corner
as the waitress scribbles
my order for steak and eggs.
Smoke lingers above a couple
in the next booth as the woman
gestures with a cigarette
at a man whose eyes stare blankly
at a piece of lemon pie.
The ceiling tiles are stained yellow
from thousands of cigarettes
while dirty cobwebs droop
from speakers that occasionally
generate a honky-tonk tune.
The waitress brings me my coffee
and leaves without a word
to ring out a balding gentleman
and snatch a pitcher to fill glasses.
Her long brown hair perches
atop her head in a bun,
her face shows wrinkles earned
before their time. Her motions
portray no happiness. Her eyes,
vacant as she shuffles over
with my food and leaves again
to clear off another table.
I begin to conjure stories
in my mind about her life.
Maybe she cared for her sick mother,
never became a nurse, sentencing
herself to a life of waitressing
in a third-rate greasy spoon.
Perhaps she got pregnant
by her high school sweetheart,
dropped out to raise her son,
married the father and now
labors to support his beer habit
and odd beanie baby fetish.
It seems to me she simply floated
day to day, an empty shell,
not seeing the world before her
until ultimately
tomorrow was today
and yesterday slipped away
like others before, abandoning
her to this mundane existence.
Written in college while hanging out at Montgomery’s Truck Stop.